Transnational Legal Ordering of Criminal Justice

September 21–22, 2018
University of California, Irvine School of Law
Room LAW 3500H
Schedule >

About the Conference

Political and legal processes within nation-states are commonly assumed to define and enforce criminal prohibitions, and to legitimate criminal justice practices. However, domestic processes of criminal lawmaking and enforcement are increasingly enmeshed within transnational legal orders, such that the national sphere can be viewed as both a regulatee and a regulator. The United States and Western European countries work to export models of criminalization and policing to developing countries, and they build networks to enhance international police cooperation. Transnational systems of social indicators monitor and evaluate legislative and enforcement measures that states employ to address transnational crimes such as human trafficking, drug trafficking, and money laundering. International organizations and international financial institutions turn to punitive criminal measures to regulate dirty money, or money laundering, and the financing of terrorism. In parallel, transnational networks of activists and professionals develop strategies of mobilization to abolish particular forms of punishment (such as the death penalty) and the repeal of particular forms of criminal legislation (such as “sodomy laws”). National and supranational courts engage in transnational dialogues regarding the legitimacy of state power to criminalize particular conduct, and of state conduct in the ensuing penal processes.

This conference, hosted by the UCI School of Law Center on Globalization, Law and Society, and co-sponsored by the Haifa University Faculty of Law, the American Society of International Law (ASIL), and the UCI Journal of International, Transnational, and Comparative Law, brought together leading scholars from around the world to stimulate conversations between those whose work examines transnational trends in areas of criminal justice and leading theorists of transnational legal orders. It aimed to improve our understanding of transformations in criminal law and policy catalyzed by the growing intensity and complexity of interactions between local, national, and transnational sites. We aim to map the emerging landscape of the transnational ordering of criminal justice, understand its formation, analyze its effects, and evaluate the implications for understanding the normative grounds for the exercise of authority in the criminal justice field.

Co-sponsored by: American Society of International Law       Haifa University


 

    Participants

  • Ely Aaronson

    Senior Lecturer
    University of Haifa Faculty of Law
  • Vanessa Barker

    Docent and Associate Professor
    Stockholm University
  • Eve Darian-Smith

    Professor, Anthropology and Law
    Director, International Studies
    UCI School of Social Sciences

  • Terence Halliday

    Research Professor
    American Bar Foundation
  • Radha Ivory

    Lecturer in Law
    University of Queensland, Australia

  • Prabha Kotiswaran

    Professor of Law and Social Justice
    King's College London Dickson Poon School of Law

  • Maximo Langer

    Professor of Law
    UCLA School of Law

  • Ron Levi

    George Ignatieff Chair of Peace and Conflict Studies
    Associate Professor
    University of Toronto

  • Felix Lüth

    PhD Candidate
    Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies
  • Mona Lynch

    Department Chair
    Professor of Criminology, Law and Society and Law
    Co-Director, Center for Law, Society, and Culture
    UCI School of Social Ecology

  • Sally Merry

    Silver Professor of Anthropology
    Faculty Director, Center for Human Rights and Global Justice
    NYU

  • Stefanie Neumeier

    PhD Candidate
    USC
  • Keramet Reiter

    Associate Professor of Criminology, Law and Society and Law
    UCI School of Social Ecology
  • Manuel Alejandro Iturralde Sánchez

    Associate Professor
    Universidad de los Andes, Colombia
  • Wayne Sandholtz

    John A. McCone Chair in International Relations
    Professor of International Relations and Law
    USC
  • Joachim Savelsberg

    Arsham and Charlotte Ohanessian Chair
    Professor of Sociology
    University of Minnesota

  • Ioana Sendroiu

    PhD Candidate
    University of Toronto
  • Gregory Shaffer

    Chancellor's Professor of Law
    Director, Center on Globalization, Law and Society
    UCI School of Law
  • Dirk van Zyl Smit

    Professor of Comparative and International Penal Law
    University of Nottingham

Conference Gallery

Transnational Legal Ordering of Criminal Justice